Institution
Swedish Institute
Government•Stockholm, Sweden•
About: Swedish Institute is a government organization based out in Stockholm, Sweden. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Health care. The organization has 1657 authors who have published 2301 publications receiving 103682 citations. The organization is also known as: Svenska Institutet.
Topics: Population, Health care, Cost effectiveness, Virus, Vaccination
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: VAC achieves faster healing than alginate therapy after wound debridement for deep perivascular wound infections in the groin after vascular surgery, but does not allow further inclusion of patients from an ethical point of view, and this study was stopped prematurely.
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, a quantitative study was carried out of the formation of polyelectrolyte complexes between calcium lignin sulphonate (LS) and three cationic poly electrolytes, two polytrimethylaminoethylmethacrylates (I and II) with different molecular weight and one acrylamide copolymer.
40 citations
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40 citations
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TL;DR: The main research finding was a double dissociation: children with pronounced phonological problems improved their general word decoding skill more from phonological than from orthographic training, whereas the opposite was observed forChildren with pronounced orthographic problems.
Abstract: In a longitudinal intervention study, Swedish reading disabled children in grades 2-3 received either a phonological (n = 41) or an orthographic (n = 39) training program. Both programs were comput ...
40 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, a sample of Rainbow trout were stored at -18°C and -40°C for 0, 3, 7, 13, 13 and 18 mo. and they were subjected to four thawing treatments.
Abstract: Rainbow trout were subjected to four thawing treatments after being stored at -18°C and -40°C for 0, 3, 7, 13 and 18 mo. Membrane integrity was estimated as the volume of centrifuged tissue fluid (CTF) and by lysosomal β-N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAG) activity in CTF. Slow thawing, in air at 5°C, resulted in higher NAG activity in CTF and a larger volume of CTF than fast thawing, at 25°C in water, independent of storage time. After 3 or more months storage, a higher NAG activity in CTF and a larger volume of CTF were found in all -18°C stored samples compared to that at -40°C. Sensory evaluation confirmed differences between trout stored at -18°C and at -40°C for 18 mo.
40 citations
Authors
Showing all 1667 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Kevin Marsh | 128 | 567 | 55356 |
Gerhard Andersson | 118 | 902 | 49159 |
Staffan Normark | 96 | 289 | 29787 |
Tirone E. David | 82 | 382 | 22078 |
Olof Nyrén | 78 | 274 | 23034 |
Antonella d'Arminio Monforte | 74 | 462 | 26093 |
Björn Lindman | 74 | 526 | 21454 |
Job J. Bwayo | 74 | 190 | 16928 |
Jan Albert | 73 | 323 | 19740 |
Dan I. Andersson | 73 | 257 | 20958 |
Jan Vinjé | 72 | 233 | 19778 |
Helena Johansson | 72 | 320 | 27007 |
David Bergqvist | 71 | 597 | 22200 |
Lars Engstrand | 69 | 302 | 20090 |
Joan Ivanov | 67 | 211 | 13473 |